The river multiple: exploring place, identity and resource politics on the Gander River, Newfoundland

Resources, identity and place are important concepts to explore for understanding questions around resource politics between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people and groups. On the Gander River, central Newfoundland, questions of how Mi’kmaw and non-Aboriginal people identify with this place and how...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Daniels, Jennifer Kathleen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/8105/
https://research.library.mun.ca/8105/1/thesis.pdf
Description
Summary:Resources, identity and place are important concepts to explore for understanding questions around resource politics between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people and groups. On the Gander River, central Newfoundland, questions of how Mi’kmaw and non-Aboriginal people identify with this place and how they engage with each other and the resources therein are critical in addressing local governance and a larger set resource politics. With its focus on place and community-based and ‘ground-up’ participatory development, the place-based development model offers a great potential for communities to thoroughly engage with, and lead, in local development and governance processes. This analysis demonstrates a number of place-based development strategies in the Gander River region, which have helped a culturally diverse set of residents pursue local development and tackle common resource governance and rural development challenges. Within the geographic literature on place, it is argued that identity is highly intertwined with socio-spatial relations, and yet, in the vast majority of place-based development and natural resource geography literatures, such relations are not extended to the bio-physical landscape. Rarely do questions of materiality – conceived of as hybrid and heterogeneous relations existing in embodied forms – enter into discussions of resource governance and development. In adopting a critical, post-colonial approach to fieldwork – through open and reflexive interview techniques, participant observation and following local practices as they emerged on the river – in addition to drawing from science and technology studies literature, it became evident that the different practices on the river yield different kinds of places and resources. In constructing an account of the practices of Mi’kmaw and non-Aboriginal river users, this research demonstrates that the different practices enact ontologically distinct Atlantic salmon on the Gander River and these differences cannot be conceived in strictly ...